Tempers flare between I-35 rivals after UTSA run-rules Texas State, 19-4

Aidan Eshelman. UTSA beat Texas State 19-4 in non-conference baseball on Tuesday, May 12, 2026, at Roadrunner Field. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Freshman Aidan Eshelman had three hits and four RBIs Tuesday night as the Roadrunners opened a 15-run lead after three innings and walloped the Texas State Bobcats, 19-4. The game was called on the run rule in the seventh. – Photo by Joe Alexander

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

The latest chapter of the I-35 baseball rivalry between the UTSA Roadrunners and the Texas State Bobcats came complete with a wild ending Tuesday night as tempers flared between opposing coaching staffs.

After stuffing a potential big inning for Texas State in the top of the first, UTSA rallied for eight runs in the bottom half, capped by Caden Miller’s two-run homer.

By the time umpires called it on the run rule after Texas State’s at bat in the top of the seventh, the Roadrunners emerged with a 19-4 victory in a game with NCAA tournament implications.

Pat Hallmark. UTSA beat Texas State 19-4 in non-conference baseball on Tuesday, May 12, 2026, at Roadrunner Field. - Photo by Joe Alexander

UTSA coach Pat Hallmark’s team can clinch at least a share of the American Conference regular-season title if it wins once in a three-game series against UAB starting Thursday at Roadrunner Field. – Photo by Joe Alexander

UTSA freshman shortstop Aidan Eshelman starred offensively with three hits, including a double and two singles, and four RBIs.

He also scored three times.

As soon as the game was completed between the NCAA tournament contenders, coaches from both teams congregated at home plate.

Emotions soon boiled over with the Bobcats alleging that Roadrunners relief pitcher James Hubbard had been throwing at their hitters.

“I don’t know what happened with Hubbard,” UTSA coach Pat Hallmark said. “I guess they didn’t like it.”

In the postgame, an observer close to the action in the top of the sixth inning described an at bat by Texas State’s Blake Beheler against Hubbard.

After the first pitch arrived as a routine ball one, the next three sailed behind Beheler, who had had hit a two-run homer in the fourth inning.

The three pitches thrown behind the batter zoomed past the dirt circle around home plate, thudding against the padded wall at the screen.

At that juncture, umpire Jared Higdon issued a warning to both benches.

In his postgame remarks, Hallmark told reporters that he had been talking at home plate with Texas State coach Steve Trout about the Hubbard “situation” when things got heated.

During the conversation, one of the Texas State assistants standing nearby “put his hands on me,” Hallmark said.

“So,” the UTSA coach said, “I put my hands back on him. I hope the video is available so everybody can see he put his hands on me first, and, I’m not going to let him put his hands on me.”

A Texas State assistant coach?

Kendall Dove. UTSA beat Texas State 19-4 in non-conference baseball on Tuesday, May 12, 2026, at Roadrunner Field. - Photo by Joe Alexander

UTSA pitcher Kendall Dove earned the victory in one and two thirds innings of relief. Dove entered the game with two runners on base in the first inning and held Texas State scoreless. – Photo by Joe Alexander

“Yes,” Hallmark said. “I don’t even know his name. You can print that, too. I don’t know his name. But he put his hands on me, and then, I’m going to defend myself from people that put their hands on me.

“Print it all.”

Earlier in the afternoon, about 15 minutes before the first pitch, fans from both schools jammed the grandstands at the modest stadium on the UTSA campus.

They also filled just about every corner of space down the left and right field lines.

Likely, it was the largest crowd of the season at Roadrunner Field (announced later at 1,585).

The crowd included fans supporting both teams, who turned out to watch a game in the last week of the regular season between in-state rivals from separate conferences.

The Roadrunners (35-17) of the American Conference held off the hard-hitting visitors early.

In the first few innings, frustration for the Sun Belt-affiliated Bobcats (31-22) mounted as they kept hitting the ball hard, only to come up with one early run.

UTSA, meanwhile, kept taking advantage of a blizzard of Texas State mistakes in the form of walks, batters hit by pitches and errors.

By the end of the third, the Roadrunners had taken a 16-1 lead, effectively putting behind them last week’s disappointing stretch of four games in which they lost three.

Texas State's Rashawn Galloway. UTSA beat Texas State 19-4 in non-conference baseball on Tuesday, May 12, 2026, at Roadrunner Field. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Rashawn Galloway leads Texas State with a .341 batting average. The senior from Boerne is a key player on a team vying for NCAA tournament consideration. – Photo by Joe Alexander

“I’m proud of ’em,” Hallmark said of his players. “Swung the bat good. We did everything pretty well. Starting pitching wasn’t very good, but I’m very proud of (reliever Kendall) Dove going out there and throwing strikes and getting us out of that first inning.”

In the top of the first, the Bobcats had a chance to break the game open with a big inning, but they all they got was a zero on the scoreboard.

Credit Hallmark for stopping the rally before it could really get started and then Dove for finishing it.

After Roadrunners starter Blayne Lyne walked leadoff hitter Rashawn Galloway on five pitches, he threw two more balls to the next man up, Manny Salas.

At that point, catcher Andrew Stucky visited the mound as the UTSA bullpen started to get busy. Two pitches later, Hallmark walked out to the mound to make a change.

Dove entered the game and yielded a hard-hit single by Salas to left, sending Galloway to third base.

At that point, the momentum started to turn in UTSA’s favor, as Jacquae Stewart bounced a ball back to the pitcher for the first out.

On the out, Salas advanced to second base, giving the Bobcats a prime opportunity with runners at second and third and cleanup hitter Clayton Namken at the plate.

Namken, a freshman from New Braunfels, hit two home runs in the Bobcats’ fourth straight victory in a game Arkansas State on Sunday afternoon.

As he faced Dove, Namken promptly drilled an extremely loud line drive that looked like it had the velocity to go all the way to the wall if nobody stopped it,

Fortunately for UTSA, the ball went straight to Eshelman at shortstop.

The freshman made the easy catch and flipped to second base to double off Salas for a double play that ended a scoreless inning.

In the bottom of the first, the Roadrunners exploded for eight runs on five hits and three Bobcats errors. As a result, Texas State starter Titan Targac (2-4) was tagged with the loss.

Dove (4-1) earned the victory in one and two thirds innings, during which he yielded one run on four hits.

Mike DeBattista. UTSA beat Texas State 19-4 in non-conference baseball on Tuesday, May 12, 2026, at Roadrunner Field. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Mike DeBattista worked two innings for the Roadrunners and threw a team-high 40 pitches. He gave up two hits, two unearned runs and a walk while striking out three. – Photo by Joe Alexander

Records

Texas State 31-22
UTSA 35-17

Coming up

UAB at UTSA, Thursday, 6 p.m.
UAB at UTSA, Friday, 6 p.m.
UAB at UTSA, Saturday, 11 a.m.
(end of regular season)

American Conference tournament, at Clearwater, Fla., May 20-24.

NCAA implications

In February, Texas State won the first meeting this season in San Marcos.

UTSA rebounded with the resounding victory over its rival on Tuesday night, setting up a potential debate within the NCAA tournament selection committee about which team has the stronger case to make the 64-team field.

Texas State entered Tuesday night with a No. 43 RPI ranking, against No. 50 for UTSA.

“It’s a big game,” Hallmark said, “because we could be in a situation for an at-large bid against them … We have some work to do this weekend (against UAB).

“But if we can do what … we need to do, (and) then you compare our resume’s, hopefully we have a conference championship and a 1-1 record and a big win against ’em.

“If it comes down to an at large (bid) between us and them, I think it should clearly, clearly go our way.”

D1 Baseball and Baseball America mention both UTSA and Texas State in their latest NCAA tournament projections.

Notes on the rivalry

In the I-35 baseball rivalry, Texas State leads UTSA 64-43 in an all-time series that dates back to 1992.

On the 11th day of this season on Feb. 24, Texas State won 7-2 in San Marcos, but UTSA retaliated in the season’s last week, winning by a 15-run margin in the rematch.

Both the 19 runs and the 15-run margin are records in the series for UTSA victories.

The difference in the two games this season?

Texas State pitching gave up only two freebies in San Marcos, walking one batter and hitting one with a pitch.

On Tuesday night in San Antonio, the number was 14, including nine walks issued by Texas State pitching, plus five hit by pitch.

Hallmark vs. Trout

UTSA’s Pat Hallmark and Texas State’s Steve Trout have coached 11 games against one another.

Hallmark’s Roadrunners now hold a 6-5 advantage on Trout and the Bobcats, including a 4-1 edge at Roadrunner Field.

Christian Hallmark. UTSA beat Texas State 19-4 in non-conference baseball on Tuesday, May 12, 2026, at Roadrunner Field. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Christian Hallmark beats a relay throw from the outfield with a head-first slide into third base in a five-run third inning. Hallmark, the son of the UTSA head coach, dashed from first to third on a single to right field by Aidan Eshelman. – Photo by Joe Alexander

I-35 rivalry: UTSA baseball hosts Texas State tonight

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

After dropping a heartbreaker to nationally-ranked Texas and then losing a series in the American Conference at Memphis, the UTSA Roadrunners have returned home to the Alamo City, trying to forget about it all and focus on the future.

The Roadrunners’ future is now as they prepare to play their non-conference finale at home today against the regional rival Texas State Bobcats, followed by three at home against the UAB Blazers on Thursday through Saturday to close out their American Conference regular-season schedule.

“Losing three games in a week is disappointing,” UTSA third baseman Diego Diaz said, “but I think by now, we should all be moving past it and just looking forward to the next game. Just the next pitch, the next at bat, whatever it is. Just looking forward to the next win.”

Records

Texas State 31-21
UTSA 34-17

Coming up

Texas State at UTSA, Tuesday, 6 p.m.
UAB at UTSA, Thursday, 6 p.m.
UAB at UTSA, Friday, 6 p.m.
UAB at UTSA, Saturday, 11 a.m.

American Conference tournament, at Clearwater, Fla., May 20-24

Notable

The Bobcats have won four in a row and have surged into the conversation as an NCAA tournament candidate out of the Sun Belt Conference.

Last week, Texas State won a home game at Baylor and then went on the road to win three straight Sun Belt games at Arkansas State.

With the victories, the Bobcats moved up to No. 43 in the latest ratings percentage index, ahead of the Roadrunners at No. 50.

In the Sun Belt, Coastal Carolina and Southern Mississippi are regarded by Baseball America magazine as “locks” to make the NCAA field, with Louisiana, South Alabama, Texas State and Troy in position to grab a third bid out of the conference.

By contrast, Baseball America projects the American as a one-bid conference at the moment, with the only sure pathway to the NCAA bracket being a championship run in the conference tournament.

The latest projection in D1 Baseball is more favorable to the American and the league-leading Roadrunners.

The website projects the American with two bids, with UTSA getting one of them and East Carolina the other. D1 Baseball projects that in the Sun Belt, Southern Miss, Coastal Carolina and Texas State will get invitations.

Regardless of the speculation, the Roadrunners need to win this week. They need to win tonight for the regional bragging rights and the RPI points. They need to win against UAB to claim the conference title.

As important as anything, they need to feel good about themselves and be healthy going into Clearwater next week.

“We know what’s in front of us,” UTSA coach Pat Hallmark said. “We’re going to do what we always do, which is prepare, and these guys will compete. I’ll try to stay focused in the game and make the right moves.

“Sometimes I do, sometimes I don’t, and then we’ll adapt and learn from all of it and do it again the next day.”

I-35 rivalry notable

Texas State leads the all-time series, 64-42, including a 7-2 victory over UTSA earlier this season in San Marcos. But since Steve Trout took over the Bobcats and Pat Hallmark the Roadrunners in 2020, it’s been a 5-5 series.

Since then, Hallmark and the Roadrunners have won three out of four against their rivals in San Antonio, winning 11-9 in 2024 and 12-9 last season. The Bobcats’ last win at Roadrunner Field came in 2023 when they won 5-3.

UTSA will take a two-game lead in conference into the final weekend

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Led by home runs from Trae Cassidy and James Smith IV, the Memphis Tigers exploded on Sunday for a 10-5 victory over UTSA, dashing the Roadrunners’ hopes of clinching a tie for first in the American Conference’s regular-season title chase.

The Tigers, in taking two out of three on the weekend, also handed the Roadrunners their first series loss in the American since May of 2024. UTSA had won all seven series in conference this season and 18 in row.

At the end of the day, the first-place Roadrunners held a two-game lead over the second-place East Carolina Pirates, with the Rice Owls and the UAB Blazers tied for third, three games off the pace. Each team has three remaining.

UTSA returns home this week to play regional rival Texas State in a non-conference contest on Tuesday night, followed by three in the American against UAB starting Thursday to close out the regular season.

East Carolina closes at the end of the week with three games at FAU in Boca Raton, while Rice plays three at home in Houston against Tulane. The conference tournament runs from May 20-24 in Clearwater, Fla.

UTSA is still in the driver’s seat to claim its second straight conference title. With one more victory, the Roadrunners can clinch at least a share of the championship.

In Memphis, it was a tough weekend for the visitors from San Antonio. The Tigers won 6-4 on Friday night, and UTSA rebounded Saturday with a 9-2 victory, setting up the rubber match at FedEx Park.

The Roadrunners had a chance to win it on Sunday after scoring three runs in the top of the sixth and taking a 4-2 lead.

In the uprising, Diego Diaz and Cade Sadler produced RBI singles and then UTSA pulled off a double steal for the two-run lead.

Undaunted, Memphis exploded for eight runs on seven hits in the bottom of the inning against UTSA relievers Mike DeBattista and Christopher Gutierrez, opening a 10-4 advantage.

Smith capped the outburst with a three-run homer off Gutierrez that landed in a parking lot far beyond the left field wall.

Records

UTSA 34-17, 16-8
Memphis 21-29, 12-12

Coming up

Texas State at UTSA, Tuesday, 6 p.m.
UAB at UTSA, Thursday, 6 p.m.
UAB at UTSA, Friday, 6 p.m.
UAB at UTSA, Saturday, 11 a.m.

American Conference tournament, at Clearwater, Fla., May 20-24.

Around the American

East Carolina shut out Rice 3-0 on Sunday in Greenville, N.C., moving into second place in the standings and pulling to within two games of the Roadrunners. Later Sunday, Charlotte downed UAB 10-8 in 10 innings, dropping UAB into a tie for third with Rice.

American leaderboard

UTSA 16-8, 34-17
East Carolina 14-10, 30-21-1
UAB 13-11, 29-22
Rice 13-11, 31-21
FAU 12-12, 27-24
Memphis 12-12, 21-29
Wichita State 11-13, 27-25
Charlotte 10-14, 25-26
Tulane 10-14, 25-28
South Florida 9-15, 30-20

Notable

Claiming the regular-season title is regarded as significant in UTSA’s quest for a return trip to the NCAA tournament. Since the first year of baseball in the American in 2014, every regular-season champion in the conference since then has pulled down an NCAA bid. That would also include both UCF and Houston when they tied for first in 2017.

I-35 update

The Texas State Bobcats hit six home runs Sunday in a 15-9 victory to sweep three games from Arkansas State at Jonesboro, Ark. Boerne’s Rashawn Galloway and New Braunfels’ Clayton Namken hit two homers apiece for Texas State. They have won four straight overall, improving to 31-21 on the season. The Bobcats are 13-14 in the Sun Belt. Texas State beat UTSA 7-2 on Feb. 24 in San Marcos.

UTSA downs Memphis; second straight title in the American is in reach

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

The first-place UTSA Roadrunners on Saturday moved closer to their second straight regular-season baseball title in the American Conference.

About an hour after they won 9-2 on the road against the Memphis Tigers, the Roadrunners’ lead in the American standings expanded to three games following the Rice Owls’ 5-3 victory over the East Carolina Pirates.

With a 16-7 record in the American, UTSA now leads three teams tied for second — Rice, East Carolina and UAB — all at 13-10. All have four games to play.

UAB kept pace with the leaders earlier in the day when the Blazers downed the Charlotte 49ers, 11-2.

In Memphis, UTSA scored six runs with two outs to back the pitching of senior Conor Myles. Myles (9-1) worked six innings, allowing two runs on eight hits, in the game played in Memphis at FedEx Park.

The lefty from Australia out-dueled Memphis lefty David Case (5-7) and earned a win that allowed the Roadrunners to rebound from a frustrating loss.

After leaving 14 runners on base and losing 6-4 to Memphis on Friday, UTSA needed a bounce-back effort to keep moving in the direction of a second straight title.

The Roadrunners also needed the win to avoid losing a series in conference for the first time since May of 2024.

UTSA’s offense came through with 13 hits, including two each by Drew Detlefsen, Caden Miller and Cade Sadler.

Detlefsen, who leads the conference in RBIs, went two for six and drove in two.

Josh Arquette, starting at third base as part of a ploy to give the Roadrunners more right-side hitting against a left-handed starter, also had a hit and two RBIs.

A day after hitting only three-for-21 with runners on base, the Roadrunners hit eight for 23 with runners on and eight for 16 with two outs.

Records

UTSA 34-16, 16-7
Memphis 20-29, 11-12

Coming up

UTSA at Memphis, Sunday, 11 a.m.
x-Texas State at UTSA, Tuesday, 6 p.m.
UAB at UTSA, Thursday, 6 p.m.
UAB at UTSA, Friday, 6 p.m.
UAB at UTSA, Saturday, 11 a.m.
x-non conference; all others American conference games

Notable

Sunday’s game between the UTSA Roadrunners and the Memphis Tigers has been moved up to an 11 a.m. central time start.

Rice making noise

A little more than a week ago, the Roadrunners sat in a tie for first in the American standings with the East Carolina Pirates and the UAB Blazers.

With outside help from the in-state rival Rice Owls, the Roadrunners have since taken a commanding three-game lead, starting by taking care of their own business and sweeping three from the Wichita State Shockers at home and then splitting its first two on the road at Memphis.

In the same span, East Carolina dropped two of three on the road at Memphis, before losing twice at home to Rice in the past few days. The UAB Blazers, in turn, lost three in Houston at Rice last weekend before splitting its first two at home against Charlotte.

Earlier this season, the Roadrunners won series against both the Pirates and the Owls. They will close the regular season with three at home against the Blazers.

Memphis scores a 6-4 victory to cool off first-place UTSA

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Marcus Smith hit high-hop, two-run single over first base in the bottom of the eighth inning Friday night, breaking up a tie game and leading the Memphis Tigers to a 6-4 victory over the mistake-prone UTSA Roadrunners.

Carson Fair closed in the ninth inning as the Tigers won the opener of an American Conference three-game series at FedEx Park in Memphis.

With the victory, Memphis (20-28, 11-11) stayed in the thick of the chase for a berth in the conference’s postseason tournament. For the Roadrunners (33-16, 15-7), the loss was a disappointment as they squandered a chance to open a three-game lead in the American.

Instead, UTSA leads second-place East Carolina by two games and UAB and Rice by three with five to play in conference.

The Roadrunners, who led 3-0 after two innings, endured a night of frustration on multiple levels.

Offensively, they managed only four hits against Tigers pitching and left 14 runners on base.

UTSA drew 11 walks and three hit by pitch, but one of the most productive offenses in the conference couldn’t seem to move anyone along when it counted, as the Roadrunners were limited to three-for-21 hitting with runners on base.

Defensively, they made five errors, including three by freshman shortstop Aidan Eshelman.

Memphis, meanwhile, took another step toward locking up a berth in the postseason tournament. In conference play, the Tigers have completely flipped the script, opening at 3-8 and following with an 8-3 surge in their last 11.

Game 2 of the series against the Roadrunners is Saturday, with the Game 3 finale on Sunday afternoon.

UTSA will need to win both remaining games to keep alive its streak of conference series victories. The Roadrunners have won all seven of their series in the American this season and 18 straight dating back to May of 2024.

Records

UTSA 33-16, 15-7
Memphis 20-28, 11-11

Coming up

UTSA at Memphis, Saturday, 2 p.m.
UTSA at Memphis, Sunday, 1 p.m.

Texas State at UTSA, Tuesday, 6 p.m.

Notable

The Roadrunners scored three runs in the top of the second off Memphis starter Will Howell. The first three batters in the inning reached on a hit by pitch, a walk and a bunt single by Jordan Ballin.

With one out, Howell threw a wild pitch that skipped past the catcher, allowing Jacob Silva to score from third for the first run of the game. Next, Christian Hallmark scored from third on a Caden Miller sacrifice fly.

It was an unusual play as the pop up in foul territory was caught with the third baseman back pedaling, giving Hallmark just enough of an opening to race home and slide head first under the tag for the second run.

Drew Detlefsen followed with an RBI double off the base of the wall to make it 3-0. Howell walked the next two batters but escaped further damage when Diego Diaz popped up to right field for the third out.

An early defensive highlight for the Roadrunners came in the bottom of the third when Detlefsen robbed Trae Cassidy of what could have been either a two-run homer, or, at least, an extra-base hit that would have scored a run.

Later in the inning, though, Memphis’ Brady McAbee drilled a three-run homer off UTSA starter Gunnar Brown to tie the game, 3-3. McAbee led Memphis with two hits in four at bats and four RBIs.

Another crazy play emerged in the top of the fifth inning. With UTSA’s Jordan Ballin at second base, Eshelman popped up in the infield. Memphis reliever Isaac Lucas, however, couldn’t get a glove on the ball and it fell to the turf for an RBI double for a 4-3 UTSA lead.

McAbee, facing UTSA’s Connor Kelley, drilled an RBI single in the bottom half of the fifth to tie the game.

Upstart Memphis is expected to challenge first-place UTSA this weekend

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

With two weekends remaining in the regular season, the first-place UTSA Roadrunners are expected to face a strong challenge in American Conference play this weekend.

Diego Diaz. UTSA baseball beat Dallas Baptist 12-8 on Friday, Feb. 20, 2026, at Roadrunner Field. - Photo by Joe Alexander

UTSA third baseman Diego Diaz slugged a home run to highlight a four-for-four performance in an 11-8 loss against fourth-ranked Texas on Tuesday night. – Photo by Joe Alexander

The Roadrunners, leading the conference by two games, will play three on the road starting Friday night against the surging Memphis Tigers.

It’s a team that has emerged in the past month as an unlikely spoiler in the race for the championship.

“Their record’s not wonderful,” UTSA coach Pat Hallmark said. “But they’re playing their best baseball right now.”

Looking at the season as a whole, some might wonder why the Roadrunners should be overly concerned with the Tigers.

Didn’t the Tigers (19-28 overall, 10-11 in the American) lose nine of their first 11 games this season?

Didn’t they lose eight of their first 12 in conference? This is all true.

The Roadrunners (33-15, 15-6) indeed will see a team this weekend in Memphis that earlier in conference lost in weekend series to Tulane and South Florida.

Both of those teams are now tied for last in the American

At the same time, Memphis’ record is deceiving. It took its lumps early during a competitive non-conference schedule and then completely changed its mindset and outlook.

Since the middle of April, the Tigers have won nine of their last 14 games.

In conference play, they’ve won six of their last nine, with series victories over the second- and fourth-place teams in the American.

The turnaround may have started on April 14 when the Tigers, opening a weekend series in Houston, defeated the Rice Owls, 4-1.

They went on to sweep three games, including the finale when they rallied for four runs over their last three at bats to claim a 6-5 thriller in 10 innings.

Pitcher Logan Rushing nailed down the victory in the bottom of the 10th after giving up a one-out double.

Underscoring both the Tigers’ potential and the parity in the American, the Owls have since rallied into fourth place since that April 16 setback.

Last week, playing at home, the Tigers struck again.

They lost the opener but then rebounded to win the next two in a series over the second-place East Carolina Pirates, a perennial NCAA tournament team.

The Pirates dominated the opener, claiming a 12-0, run-rule victory in eight innings. From there, the Tigers took over.

In the second game, they defeated East Carolina ace lefthander Ethan Norby in a 5-3 victory.

Riding the momentum, Memphis won again the next day, 9-4.

Freddy Rodriguez and Shane Cox homered for the Tigers to affect the outcome of a game that, incidentally, helped boost UTSA into its two-game lead.

Hallmark said it’s always a challenge to face teams coached by Memphis’ Matt Riser.

“They always pitch,” he said. “They’re well coached … I know coach Riser well.

“(They’re) a little bit like us offensively. He tries to play a complete offense and bunt and run, if it’s there, but he also wants to stand in the box and get some hits.”

The Tigers’ running game on the bases is one of the best. They’ve registered a nation’s 27th-best 108 stolen bases, with Rodriguez fourth individually in that department.

Rodriguez has 37 steals in 42 attempts, while Javon Hernandez is 23 out of 24.

“They’ll be good,” Hallmark said. “They reloaded a little bit with a kid named (Michael) Gupton in center, who (UTSA assistant Ryan) Aguayo was on heavily (in recruiting) this summer. And, frankly, we couldn’t afford him.

“I guess Memphis could, because he ended up at Memphis. But he’s got (13) home runs for ’em. A very, very talented hitter. So they can swing the bat a little bit.”

UTSA, a team that has won all seven conference series this season and 18 straight since May of 2024, is coming off an emotional mid-week loss at fourth-ranked Texas.

Having won four games in a row, including a conference sweep at home last weekend against Wichita State, the Roadrunners played in Austin on Tuesday night and lost 11-8 to fourth-ranked Texas.

Making strong cases at UTSA for all-conference consideration are position players Drew Detlefsen, Caden Miller, Lane Haworth and Andrew Stucky, plus pitchers Conor Myles, Connor Kelley and Sam Simmons.

Records

UTSA 33-15, 15-6
Memphis 19-28, 10-11

Coming up

UTSA at Memphis, Friday, 6 p.m.
UTSA at Memphis, Saturday, 2 p.m.
UTSA at Memphis, Sunday, 1 p.m.

Texas State at UTSA, Tuesday, 6 p.m.

American leaderboard

UTSA 15-6, 33-15
East Carolina 13-8, 29-19-1
UAB 12-9, 28-20
Rice 11-10, 29-20
Wichita State 10-11, 26-23
FAU 10-11, 25-23
Memphis 10-11, 19-28
Charlotte 8-13, 23-25
South Florida 8-13, 29-18
Tulane 8-13, 23-27

Carson Tinney’s eighth-inning grand slam powers Texas past UTSA, 11-8


Texas slugger and Notre Dame transfer Carson Tinney smashes a go-ahead grand slam against UTSA in the eighth inning. – Video from Texas athletics via x.com.

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Carson Tinney crushed a grand slam in the bottom of the eighth inning as the fourth-ranked Texas Longhorns averted a fourth-straight loss to UTSA, downing the Roadrunners 11-8 Tuesday night at UFCU Disch-Falk Field.

With the victory, the Longhorns beat the Roadrunners for the first time since 2020.

UTSA and Texas did not play from 2021-2024. Last season, the Roadrunners won all three games off the Longhorns in Austin, including two in the NCAA playoffs.

In the rematch, the two met on a muggy Tuesday night in Austin. The Longhorns jumped on the Roadrunners early, scoring four runs in the bottom of the first.

Undeterred, the Roadrunners retaliated with one run in the second and six in the third to take a 7-4 lead. Garrett Gruell highlighted the third-inning outburst with a pinch-hit, three-run homer.

The Longhorns tied it in the bottom half, scoring three times, with Maddox Monsour’s two-run home run making it a 7-7 ballgame.

In the seventh, UTSA broke up a battle of the bullpens when Diego Diaz ripped an RBI double — his fourth hit of the night — to push UTSA into an 8-7 lead.

Texas answered in a big way in the eighth. Facing Sam Simmons, the Longhorns caught a break.

Casey Borba led off with a pop up in front of the mound, but Simmons dropped the ball.

Flustered, Simmons walked Monsour to put two men aboard with nobody out. From there, Presley Courville sacrifice bunted with Borba moving to third and Monsour to second.

UTSA coach Pat Hallmark had seen enough. He went to the bullpen and brought in Connor Kelley, one of his hottest pitchers, who promptly walked Texas’ leading hitter, Aiden Robbins.

Tinney, one of the Longhorns’ leading power threats, was next up. On a 1-1 count, he drilled a ball over the left wall that traveled 483 feet and took one hop to an adjacent tennis center.

Hard-throwing Thomas Burns entered the game to pitch the ninth for the Longhorns, and he notched the save with a 1-2-3 inning. Freshman Brody Walls (2-0) earned the win.

Walls entered the game in the fifth to shut down a UTSA rally and went on to work three and two thirds of an inning. He gave up one run on one hit — the Diaz double — with one walk. Walls struck out five.

Simmons (7-4), charged with two runs on one hit in one inning, took the loss.

Diaz, a 5-10 junior from Sharyland High School in the Rio Grande Valley, led the Roadrunners at the plate with four hits. He went four-for-four, scored twice and drove in two.

In the second inning, he belted a solo home run down the right field line. Diaz added singles in the third and the fifth and then drove in the go-ahead run in the seventh with a double.

Andrew Stucky also had multiple hits, going two for four with two RBIs.

Records

UTSA 33-15
Texas 36-10

Coming up

UTSA at Memphis, Friday, 6 p.m.
UTSA at Memphis, Saturday, 2 p.m.
UTSA at Memphis, Sunday, 1 p.m.

Notable

UTSA closes its regular season with three games at Memphis this weekend, and then next week with a Tuesday night home game against Texas State, followed by three at home against UAB.

Texas, with the win over UTSA, pushed its lead in the all-time series to 27-9. At the same time, Texas is only 2-3 against Pat Hallmark-coached UTSA.

In 2020, Hallmark’s first season with the Roadrunners, the Longhorns beat the Roadrunners 6-2 before the pandemic wiped out the rest of the year.

Last season, the Roadrunners famously went 3-0 against the Horns in Austin.

They won 8-7 in 12 innings last March during the regular season. In the NCAA playoffs, they won 9-7 and 7-4 on consecutive days against the tournament’s No. 2 overall seed to clinch the Austin Regional title.

Despite Tuesday’s loss, the Roadrunners figure to have a good shot at making the NCAA tournament for the second straight season.

Right now, they have a two-game lead in the American Conference regular-season race with six to play, including three this weekend at Memphis.

Hallmark says winning the regular-season title in the American would “go a long way” toward boosting his team’s chances of making the 64-team field.

The Roadrunners also could make the NCAA by winning the American’s postseason tournament. The American championship is scheduled May 20-24 in Clearwater, Fla.


UTSA’s Diego Diaz belts a second-inning, solo homer down the right-field line. Video from UTSA athletics via x.com


Pinch hitter Garrett Gruell boosts UTSA into a 7-4 lead in the third inning with a three-run homer. – Video from UTSA athletics via x.com.

UTSA’s Hallmark forecasts a high-scoring game at Texas

Update: Probable starters for tonight’s UTSA – Texas baseball game in Austin are James Hubbard (1-1, 6.92 ERA) for the Roadrunners against Max Grubbs (2-0, 4.67) for the Longhorns.

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Last year, UTSA Roadrunners coaches figured that if they could limit the damage done by Ethan Mendoza, Adrian Rodriguez and Max Belyeu, then they would have a good chance to keep pace with the Texas Longhorns.

Pat Hallmark. UTSA beat Wichita State 13-7 in American Conference baseball in the first game of a doubleheader on Saturday, May 2, 2026. - photo by Joe Alexander

UTSA coach Pat Hallmark has guided his team to a 33-14 record going into a Tuesday night test in Austin against the Texas Longhorns. Texas is 35-10 and ranked fourth in the latest D1 Baseball Top 25 poll. – File photo by Joe Alexander

As it turned out, the Roadrunners did more than just keep up. They won three games from the perennial national power in Austin, including one in the regular season and two in the NCAA playoffs, to send shock waves around the nation.

With the Roadrunners preparing to play the Horns in Austin for the first time this season on Tuesday night, the equation has changed.

Even though Belyeu has moved on to professional baseball, Roadrunners coaches see a Longhorns lineup this season that poses more of a problem.

“They’re deeper,” UTSA coach Pat Hallmark said, meaning that Texas has more ability this year to score runs.

“This might sound weird,” the coach said, “but they’re a little bit like (the University of the Incarnate Word). The message (to our pitchers) against UIW was that you’re not going to pitch a shutout today.

“You’re not going to pitch a two hitter. It’ll be the same (against Texas). Like, Texas is going to get some hits. Texas is going to score some runs. I think the key to this game is quality at bats in our lineup.”

Hallmark said he forecasts a high-scoring game.

“I could be wrong,” he said. “I could have this all wrong and it’ll be 1-0, but that would shock me. But you might see something more in the neighborhood of, like 10-8, 12-10, or something like that.

“Their lineup is just deeper. Deeper (in) power (hitting). In other words, people that can do some damage.”

For the fourth-ranked Longhorns, who improved to 35-10 by winning two of three from No. 10 Mississippi State over the weekend, Mendoza and Rodriguez haven’t hit at the same high level this season.

Last year, Mendoza batted .333 and Rodriguez .313, with both of them hovering just above .900 in OPS, a combination of average, on base percentage and slugging.

This season, Mendoza is batting for an average of .281 with an .884 OPS. Rodriguez is at .262 and .779.

The biggest producers in the Texas lineup right now are Seton Hall transfer Aiden Robbins, freshman Anthony Pack Jr. and catcher Carson Tinney, formerly of Notre Dame.

Robbins leads the Longhorns, batting .365. He’s also got 18 homers and 51 RBIs.

His power is not a rumor. In March, at the Bruce Bolt Classic in Houston, Robbins launched a home run that hit the train tracks at the top of Daikin Park, where the Houston Astros play.

Pack, a multi-skilled freshman from California, bats .348 and has 40 RBIs. Combined with speed that has allowed him to steal 17 bases in 18 attempts, he will test the Roadrunners in many ways.

Tinney, from Castle Pines, Colo., is a .314 hitter with 16 home runs, with two of them coming in one game last Tuesday at home against the Sam Houston State Bearkats.

His two-run blast in the bottom of the ninth rallied the Longhorns past the Bearkats, 15-14.

On the weekend, the Longhorns won a Southeastern Conference series in Austin by taking two of three from the 10th-ranked Mississippi State Bulldogs.

Records

UTSA 33-14 (15-6 in the American)
Texas 35-10 (15-8 in the SEC)

Coming up

UTSA at Texas, Tuesday, 6:30 p.m.

UTSA at Memphis, Friday, 6 p.m.
UTSA at Memphis, Saturday, 2 p.m.
UTSA at Memphis, Sunday, 1 p.m.

Notable

Pitching plans haven’t been announced for either team as yet.

The Roadrunners are coming off a 4-0 week — all at home — in which they beat the Incarnate Word Cardinals, 22-10, last Tuesday and then swept the Wichita State Shockers, 13-7, 8-1 and 6-3.

With the Roadrunners sitting on 33 wins and in first place by two games in the American, they have moved up to No. 38 in the national ratings percentage index.

As for their NCAA tournament chances, the forecast is good at the moment.

The Roadrunners are projected along with the East Carolina Pirates as teams from the American Conference expected to make the 64-team field, according to The Tennessean and On3.com.

UTSA coach Pat Hallmark said he’s focused on winning the American’s regular-season championship, which he said would “go a long way” toward securing the program’s second straight NCAA bid.

“In my opinion we’re winning the games that we should win and even some that we shouldn’t,” he said. “I think that we’re overachieving. So I’m happy about that, and that’s something that I keep my mind on, and we’ll see where the RPI shakes out.

“If we can win the conference — which I don’t mind talking about — it’s a big if. We haven’t done it. But we’re in a position in the last two weeks to possibly win it. If we can … (that) will go a long way in putting us in the NCAA tournament, in my opinion.

“That’s what history says. They definitely will look at a regular-season conference championship, as well as RPI. That championship will hold some weight. That’s really where we’re most focused right now, is trying to win this thing.”

First-place UTSA wins 6-3 to complete a conference series sweep of Wichita State


Jake Qualia made the most of his first weekend start in college baseball, yielding two runs on three hits in six and two thirds innings. – Video from UTSA athletics via x.com.

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Freshman Jake Qualia pitched the first-place the UTSA Roadrunners to a 6-3 victory over the Wichita State Shockers Sunday to complete their first American Conference series sweep of the season.

With the win, the Roadrunners opened a two-game lead on the second-place East Carolina Pirates in their quest to repeat as conference regular-season champions.

Later Sunday, the Pirates lost 9-4 to the Memphis Tigers at Memphis. Meanwhile, the UAB Blazers dropped a 10-3 decision to Rice to fall three games back of the league-leading Roadrunners.

When the weekend started, UTSA, East Carolina and UAB were all tied for first place in the American.

Now, after winning 13-7, 8-1 and 6-3 over a two-day span at home, the Roadrunners have a cushion going into the last two weekends of the season.

UTSA will play its second-to-last, non-conference game of the season on Tuesday at nationally-ranked Texas.

The Roadrunners famously won all three of their games against the Longhorns in Austin last season, including two straight to claim the NCAA Austin Regional title.

Pitching in his first collegiate weekend start, Qualia (3-1) notched season highs in innings pitched (six and two thirds) and pitches thrown (75) to earn the victory.

The freshman from Lubbock gave up two runs on three hits, walked two and struck out three.

In the fifth inning, he had a no hitter going when Wichita State’s Jack Quick belted a solo homer to trim the UTSA lead to 2-1.

But after the homer, Qualia didn’t panic. After he yielded a one-out single to Ethan Gonzalez, he retired another batter on a ground ball.

Gonzalez became the last out of the inning when was thrown out at third base.

He was on second and tried to move up on a Qualia pitch that bounced away from UTSA catcher Andrew Stucky.

Stucky responded well, retrieving the ball before throwing out a sliding Gonzalez to end the inning.

In the sixth inning, Qualia issued a one-out walk but was bailed out by first baseman Caden Miller’s quick reaction on a line drive.

Miller snared a shot off the bat of Jaden Gustafson and stepped on the bag to retire Zeb Walker, who had reached on the base on ball.

The seventh inning was Qualia’s last as he yielded a one-out solo home run to Owen Washburn. The righthander retired one more batter before he was pulled for Christopher Gutierrez.

Sam Simmons eventually replaced Gutierrez and got the Roadrunners out of the inning.

Pitching for the second day in a row, Simmons worked two and a third innings and allowed a run on two hits to earn his fifth save.

The lanky righthander from Manvel threw 32 pitches a day after he threw 26 in one and a third innings of relief in a Game 2, 8-1 victory.

Wichita State righthander Johnny Nuanez (4-2) was tagged with the loss. Nuanez, who hadn’t pitched in a few weeks, gave up three runs on five hits.

He walked three and threw two wild pitches, one of them allowing a run to score.

Wild pitches in general hurt the Shockers as three pitchers combined to throw four of them, with three resulting in runs scoring from third base.

Offensively for UTSA, Drew Detlefsen had two of the Roadrunners’ five hits, including an RBI double off the right field wall in the eighth inning.

With the performance, Detlefsen went two for four on the day and extended his hitting streak to 17 games.

Jordan Ballin had his nine-game hitting streak come to an end, but he did come up big with a highlight-worthy defensive play at second base and a gritty at bat in the eighth inning that resulted in a hit by pitch and a run scored.

Detlefsen (.391), Caden Miller (.376) and Lane Haworth (.330) lead the Roadrunners in hitting going into the game in Austin on Tuesday.

The fourth-ranked Longhorns improved to 35-10, including 25-4 at home, when they defeated the No. 10 Mississippi State Bulldogs 11-6 in SEC play on Sunday.

Texas defeated Mississippi State two out of three to claim its seventh SEC series victory.

American standings

UTSA 15-6, 33-14
East Carolina 13-8, 29-19-1
UAB 12-9, 28-19
Rice 11-10, 29-20
Wichita State 10-11, 26-23
FAU 10-11, 24-23
Memphis 10-11, 18-28
Charlotte 8-13, 23-24
South Florida 8-13, 29-18
Tulane 8-13, 23-26

Coming up

UTSA at Texas, Tuesday, 6:30 p.m.

UTSA at Memphis, Friday, 6 p.m.
UTSA at Memphis, Saturday, 2 p.m.
UTSA at Memphis, Sunday, May 10, 1 p.m.

Notable

After the game at Texas, UTSA will return its focus to conference play with a three-game series at Memphis, now 18-28 overall and 10-11 in the American.

On May 12, UTSA hosts the Texas State Bobcats on a Tuesday night at Roadrunner Field. The resumption of the I-35 rivalry is the team’s last non-conference game.

The Roadrunners will close out their regular-season schedule May 14-16 at home against the UAB Blazers.

UTSA wins two against Wichita State and takes over first in the American

Connor Kelley. UTSA beat Wichita State 13-7 in American Conference baseball in the first game of a doubleheader on Saturday, May 2, 2026. - photo by Joe Alexander

Connor Kelley pitched six scoreless innings of relief in a 13-7 victory over Wichita State Saturday afternoon. UTSA won the second game 8-1 to assume a one-game lead on the East Carolina Pirates in the American Conference title race. – Photo by Joe Alexander

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

In the middle innings of Saturday’s nightcap to a baseball doubleheader at Roadrunner Field, the public address announcer dutifully reported results of other games around the American Conference.

Notably, he told a crowd of 1,072 fans that UTSA’s closest competitors in the race for the championship had both lost, leaving the Roadrunners with an opportunity to gain ground in their quest for back-to-back titles.

The Roadrunners took care of their end of the deal, beating the Shockers 13-7 in an afternoon game and 8-1 at night to assume sole possession of first place in the race.

Conor Myles. UTSA vs. Charlotte in American Conference baseball on Saturday, April 18, 2026, at Roadrunner Field. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Southpaw Conor Myles gave up a run in seven innings as the Roadrunners claimed an 8-1 win in Saturday’s nightcap. – File photo by Joe Alexander

UTSA leads East Carolina by one game and UAB by two with everyone having seven to play in conference.

Hallmark said he didn’t know what happened around the league until reporters told him after the game.

“I just learned it when you said it,” Hallmark said at the end of a long day at the ball park on Saturday night. “That’s good. I’m glad of that … At the end of the day, I know everybody wants to win. Like, the fan-base wants to win, and we want to win, too.

“But it’s about playing good baseball.”

For Hallmark, that means his team is making one or fewer errors, with the pitching holding the opposition to three walks or less and the hitters striking out five times or less. Also, just “fighting with the bat” to stay alive with two strikes.

“I thought we did all of that in the second game,” Hallmark said. “In the first game, we weren’t quite as clean, so, when we do those things, we tend to win our share.”

Rain washed out play on Friday, forcing officials to schedule the first two games of the Wichita State series on Saturday.

By winning twice, the Roadrunners clinched their seventh series against conference competition this season and their 18th straight since May of 2024.

UTSA can claim its first sweep of a series in the American this season if it can win the finale on Sunday.

Hallmark said he doesn’t know what a victory on Sunday would do for the team’s psyche going down the stretch.

Wichita State catcher Ethan Gonzalez. UTSA beat Wichita State 13-7 in American Conference baseball in the first game of a doubleheader on Saturday, May 2, 2026. - photo by Joe Alexander

Wichita State catcher Ethan Gonzalez 2026. – photo by Joe Alexander

“The guys that play, the Jordan Ballins, (Andrew) Stucky, the (Caden) Millers, the (Connor) Kelleys, the (Sam) Simmons, there’s no psyche,” he said. “They’re right. It ain’t going to hurt or help their psyche.

“They’re just right. They’re tough people. They’ve been … to a Super Regional. But … we’re in a pennant race. We’re in a championship race. So, like, they all matter. We got seven left. They all matter, and if you get one tomorrow, it’s one more that East Carolina or UAB can’t catch you.

“It’s wonderful we get to talk about (this with) the media, and the coach, the players, that we get to talk about championships and all that stuff. Nowhere I’d rather be.”

Reminded that the Roadrunners had wrapped up a share of the American title at this time last season, Hallmark grinned and said, “Yeah, we did. We don’t this year, though.”

American leaderboard

UTSA 14-6, 32-14
East Carolina 13-7, 29-18-1
UAB 12-8, 28-18
Rice 10-10, 28-20
Wichita State 10-10, 26-22
FAU 10-10, 24-22

Coming up

Wichita State at UTSA, Sunday, 1 p.m.

Notable

In Saturday’s opener, the Roadrunners were fortunate to win, in a sense that they made three errors in the field in addition to some other foibles. On the mound, they issued four walks and hit two batters. And at the plate, they struck out 10 times and left 11 runners on.

Diego Diaz. UTSA beat East Carolina 6-1 in American Conference baseball on Saturday, March 28, 2026, at Roadrunner Field. - Photo by Joe Alexander

UTSA infielder Diego Diaz played both of Saturday’s games at third base after sitting out Tuesday with a cut on his throwing hand. – File photo by Joe Alexander

On the bases, they got picked off at second.

So, it wasn’t a pretty sight for much of the game as they jumped out to a 6-3 lead after one inning and then fell behind 7-6 by the end of the fourth. In the nightcap, they played a much cleaner game. Didn’t make an error and struck out only six times.

Tied 1-1 with the Shockers after five innings, they erupted for three runs in the sixth and four in the eighth to win going away.

In retrospect, there were at least a couple of common threads in both games. In both, the bottom of the batting order punished the Shockers. Also in both, UTSA had one pitcher throw for at least six innings.

Connor Kelley in Game 1 pitched out of the bullpen and worked six frames. The big righty allowed no runs and only three hits with two walks while striking out five. In Game 2, Conor Myles was brilliant, working seven innings. The lefty from Australia allowed one run on four hits and zero walks, with eight strikeouts.

The two players have been pillars of the pitching staff most of the season, but particularly since the end of March.

“You know, it’s great,” UTSA outfielder Drew Detlefsen said. “They’re really reliable arms for us, and they’re great leaders on the mound even for the younger players. I hope they keep doing it, going forward, going into postseason. So, yeah, they’re doing great.”

Myles has now pitched seven innings to beat the Shockers two years in a row. On Saturday, he also matched his career high in strikeouts.

Jordan Ballin. UTSA beat Charlotte 11-5 in American Conference baseball on Friday, April 27, 2026, at Roadrunner Field. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Jordan Ballin had five RBIs in Saturday’s doubleheader. He has hit safely in his last nine games with 13 hits in 27 at bats during the streak. – File photo by Joe Alexander

He said it’s partially coincidence that he’s performed well against them and partially due to the motivation he feels when they talk “mess” in the dugout.

“They like getting a little chirpy,” he said. “They were getting chirpy most of the game. I don’t know why. They weren’t really doing much. I guess that’s probably why they were trying to talk some mess. It just gives me a little extra. Like, I want to dominate against them just to shut ’em up.”

Myles has surrendered only three earned runs in 36 and one third innings over his last six starts. Hallmark said he’ll never take for granted what he does for the team.

“It’s not that easy to do what he’s done all year, which is pound the zone, the strike zone, and make that other team swing the bat,” the coach said. “But, he makes throwing strikes look easy. It’s what we ask of him. We just ask him to throw strikes with multiple pitches.”

Offensively, the Roadrunners have been getting a jolt of production lately from the bottom of the batting order. Diego Diaz doubled and tripled and had three RBIs in the first game. In the nightcap, he moved up to fifth in the order and went one for four.

Jordan Ballin, meanwhile, batted eighth in both games against the Shockers. In the opener, he had a hit and three RBIs. In the nightcap, the sophomore from Boerne Champion reached base three times, had a hit, two runs and two more RBIs.

In addition, Aidan Eshelman had two hits and two RBIs in the nightcap.

“You get a lineup with depth, that’s what we had last year,” Hallmark said. “That’s what we look like we’re starting to have with Jordan. He’s been hot now for several weeks. And, Eshelman, you’ve seen it.

“…We’ve talked about how he’s growing up,” Hallmark said. “I’m not going to say he’s grown up. But you’re not really surprised any more when Eshelman has a good at bat, in the clutch. It’s like, I’ve seen him do that before.

Pat Hallmark, Aidan Eshelman. UTSA baseball beat Incarnate Word 22-10 on Tuesday, April 28, 2026, at Roadrunner Field. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Freshman Aidan Eshelman (right) is starting to add offensive production to a strong profile as a defender at shortstop. – File photo by Joe Alexander

“It’s a positive sign. That’s basically what you’re saying. It’s not a surprise any more that they have games like this. So, that’s great. They’re capable. They are capable of carrying us. It’s not always going to be Detlefsen and (Caden) Miller and Lane (Haworth).

“I agree. You get the bottom of the lineup driving in runs and getting on base and you’re in that other dugout. It’s like, crap. Now I’ve got Miller and the crew coming up.”

On the mend

Drew Detlefsen, slowed with a hamstring injury, played in left field for the first time Saturday night after four straight starts as a designated hitter.

Detlefsen had four hits in 11 at bats in the two games. He scored three runs in Game 1 and drove in two in Game 2. He said later he feels he is about 80 percent healthy.

On Tuesday night, Diego Diaz sat out at home against Incarnate Word with a cut on his hand. He returned to the starting lineup on Saturday and played both games.

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